Publisher's Synopsis
E. M. Forster's The Longest Journey is a searching meditation on the costs of conformity and the elusive pursuit of authenticity in Edwardian England. The story, Forster's favorite among his own novels, centers on Frederick (Rickie) Elliot, a physically frail and introspective Cambridge graduate, whose aspirations as a writer are thwarted by the suffocating expectations of family and society. Rickie's ill-fated marriage to the pragmatic Agnes Pembroke becomes emblematic of his capitulation to social convention, stifling his creative spirit and estranging him from his own ideals. The narrative's episodic structure mirrors Rickie's own fragmented journey toward self-knowledge, punctuated by the discovery of a half-brother, Stephen, whose existence both challenges and ultimately redeems Rickie's sense of identity.
While The Longest Journey is not a straightforward autobiography, it is generally regarded by experts as containing significant autobiographical elements, reflecting Forster's own struggles, values, and artistic concerns. Forster's prose is laced with philosophical inquiry, interrogating the boundaries between myth and reality, and exposing the hypocrisies of class and morality-also a concern of his later work. The novel's symbolic resonance is heightened by its allusion to Percy Bysshe Shelley's Epipsychidion, suggesting that the "longest journey" is not merely the passage through life, but the arduous process of becoming true to oneself in a world hostile to difference. The result is a work of profound, sometimes unsettling, introspection, and social critique. This Warbler Classics edition is a meticulous republication of the 1907 first edition and includes a detailed biographical timeline.